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about đŁČâ twenty one, she her. i study literature and creative writing and now i also do This
works Ëâș. where the moon shines between us azriel x rhysand's sister!reader
taglist open, fics crossposted to ao3
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WHERE THE MOON SHINES BETWEEN US â two Azriel x Rhysand's sister!reader
synopsis As the sister to the greatest Night Court High Lord in history, the one thing you share with Azriel is that you live in Rhysandâs shadowsâeach in your own way. But even being hidden canât stop your life from shattering, over and over again. When a bargain ties you and the shadowsinger together, what will stop that from being fractured, too?
tags yearning, slow burn, angst, hurt-comfort, mutual pining, childhood friends to lovers, inner circle, found family, did i mention SLOW BURN, this fic is literally her entire immortal life,
warnings features the spring court attack, under the mountain with rhys centuries later, & everything before, after, and in between. in this chapter: violence, angst, grief, death, misogyny, spring court attack in detail, PTSD
word count 5.7k
author's note hi angels thank you for the love on the first chapter WOW i adore you all. these first couple of chapters have felt like two at a time, but itâs soo necessary i swear. as promised, lots more of az (and the IC!) here on out. enjoy <3
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THE BEGINNING
It seemed Azrielâs spymaster abilities extended farther than you thought. Every time you saw him in the House of Wind after that night, it seemed he kept his wings tucked away even more. Sometimes, when he faced you, his broad, muscled frame and shadows over his shoulders were enough to shroud his wings entirely.Â
That did not stop you from going pale every morning when you walked into the kitchen and found him sitting at the table with his back to youâquickly remedied by his sudden need to turn and fix something at the counter, or shift around in the chair. His shadows seemed to swarm in those spaces behind his hair, his ears, his shoulders, shrouding his wings. Soon after, he stopped sitting in his usual dinner seat for breakfastâinstead picking one where his wings were behind him, never the first thing you saw upon entry.
Neither of you would acknowledge it, and you were grateful.
You spent nine years with that mark on your hand. It took time to accustom yourself to, but you grew fond of it, as if the warmth of when Azriel had taken your hand, gentle and assured, lived upon you now. Reminding you of where you were and were not.
The pattern of the bargain tattoo was a precise mirror of Azrielâs scars, you had realizedâhis own had been lined by the ink of the bargain. Almost traced. You didnât know how the patterns of bargains were chosen, but whatever it was certainly did not have a sense of humor.
As usual, Azriel was gone more often than he wasnât. Sometimes you could feel a presence in that mark, in the bargain between you. Whenever the shadowsinger was in the same room, sometimes youâd feel a stronger pulse that grabbed your attention, often mirroring the intensity of his shadows, and you assumed he felt the same from your own emotions. Youâd learned to lean into it, to find comfort in it, rather than worry too deeply. It was silent but steady, wordless but always there. And whenever the memories came, you would look at the ink and see something new. Something that did not exist the day your life had been stripped away from you.
Six years into the bargain, you were having dinner in the House of Wind with Mor. Sheâd been residing in the townhouse for some time, but often came to keep you company. As you lounged in the dining room, listening to her gossip, something jolted within youâburned in your handâand you yelped.
âI know, right?â Mor said, mistaking it for a reaction. Sheâd been telling you about one of the Hewn City dealings between two families. âAbsolutely insane, if you ask me. But I told themââ
âMor.â You lifted your hand slightly, frowning at your palm. âAzrielâs in danger.â
She went rigid. âWhat?â
âHeâsââ Your hand was trembling. Not because of him, but a sudden fear, a sudden certainty that gripped you. âGet Rhys. Get himâsend him toââ
Whatâs happening? Rhys was in your mind in an instant. Whatâs wrong?
Whereâs Azriel? Youâd never sounded so frantic in your own mind before.
Autumn Court, getting intel on Spring. Why?
Find him. Now.
Rhysâs presence in your mind vanished. No questions asked. No time wasted. Not when it was his brother who might be in danger. The Inner Circle knew about the bargain the two of you madeânot why or what, for Azriel had been as tight-lipped as usual when prodded, and so you had followed suitâbut the mark said enough. Enough for Rhys to trust you.
And it saved Azrielâs life.
âGodsdamned bloodbane," said Cassian, scowling at an unconscious Azriel in the House of Wind hours later. The two of you were standing by the door next to a positively lethal looking Rhys as he listened to Madjaâs explanations. Mor had just left to cover for your brother in a matter with the Court of Nightmares, making you promise to send word to her as soon as there were any updates.
âGodsdamned Beron,â you murmured, looking at Azrielâs sleeping face. He looked paleâunnaturally paleâand the color in his lips was nearly gone. There was an uncharacteristic but not unwelcome sense of peace in his expression, but his shadows had dissipated entirely, gone to Cauldron knows where. âHow did they even capture him?â
âAsh weapons,â said Rhys, shutting the door after Madja. He looked like a murderous lynx ready to pounce. âAz picked up news of their stores being shared with Spring, and went to get information for my father.â
You straightened. âYou let him go to inspect a storage of ash? Alone?â
 âOf course not,â Rhys growled. âHe didnât even tell me about this. He probably knew I would have gone to our father about it.â
You kneaded your temples. âHis shadows arenât magic. They shouldnât be affected by the faebane.âÂ
âThey arenât,â said Rhys, his brows furrowed as he looked at his brother. âThey disappear sometimes, when heâs unconscious. Or exhausted.â
The three of you watched him for a moment, metered by the rise and fall of Azrielâs chest. He would hate this, seeing you all worry for him.
âHe canât keep this up much longer,â you said at last, more to yourself than anyone else. âHeâs going to get himself killed.â
âFather wonât listen to me,â Rhys murmured. âIâve been telling him to give Az subordinates, at least. Even non-fae, wraiths and the like. He refuses.â
Cass looked like he was going to throttle the bed Azriel slept upon. âIf this doesnât convince him, I donât know what will.â He turned to youâgaze softening only slightly. âItâs thanks to your loverâs pact that heâs alive. Thanks, princess.â
âNot a loverâs pact, Cass.â
âThatâs all you took from what I said?â
You sighed. âI donât know how to work it.â You held up your palm. âBargains arenât supposed to form⊠emotional bonds. I donât know why this one did.â
Rhys leaned against the doorway. âThe bargain you made was emotional, I assume. The bond matched its intensity.â
You chewed on the inside of your lip. For the first time since making that pact, the mark on your hand felt like⊠a mark. Nothing more. Nothing alive or breathing within it. You tried to reach deep inside of you for something to enliven it, make it burn warmly again, but found nothing.
âIt could be a real innovation, you know,â said Rhys, eyeing you. âIf you can figure out a way to manipulate bargains to create a form of communication.â
You considered it. It reminded you of things youâd read in Dawn and Dayâs libraries. There was a spark of curiosityâno, excitementâthat flickered inside of you like a match at the theory, the possibility of developing it further. Just like you used to feel when Helion taught you a new technique or Thesan brought a new mechanic to show you their trade.
As quickly as the burst came, it slipped away, and your shoulders slumped. You only shrugged. Something cracked through Rhysâs face.
You hated the sight and brushed away the shame, leaning into Cassâs shoulder. He mussed your hair. âWhen do you think heâll wake?â you asked.
âI wouldnât wait on him,â said Rhys. âMadja expects him to be out for a while. His body is showing signs of fatigue from long before this attack.â
Your chest lurched. A part of you was angry with Azriel for allowing this to happen to himâthen angry at yourself for ever blaming him at all.
âLetâs go, princess,â said Cass, guiding you out the door. You knew from the look Rhys gave him that theyâd been speaking mind-to-mind just a second ago, but you were too preoccupied to care. âTime for you to sleep, too. You donât look so good yourself.â
You slapped his arm, and he chuckled as he steered you to your bedroom.
Those nine years passed quietly before the bargain was fulfilled. As promised, Azrielâs efforts found the weak spot in the Spring Courtâs defenses, the proper timing to attack the High Lord and his sons. It had been his relentless missions that had allowed Rhys and your father to exact revenge.
By then, youâd let Rhys see the memory of what happened to youâlet him watch as Tamlinâs brothers plastered you to the ground, tore their blades into you, tormented you and your mother until they believed you were both dead. The memory was eternal, returning to your dreams every night, even nearly a decade later. And when Rhys joined your father to exact revenge upon the Spring Court, Rhys himself tore them apart, one by one.
It had been your request to spare Tamlinâs mother, and Rhys made sure to receive your fatherâs word that she would be. That what happened to you and your mother would never happen to any mother or child ever again.
In the end, your wishes, as they often were to your father, meant little. For he did not keep his promise.
It was a swift and brutal night. While the High Lord of the Night Court slaughtered the High Lord of the Spring Court, Rhys slaughtered his heirs for what they did to you. But then your father advanced to Tamlinâs mother and Tamlin himself.Â
Tamlin had always been among the strongest of the heirs. And when your father found him, Rhys chasing after, the heir to Spring realized what was happening. He smelled the blood, saw the death that had been scraped through that glittering court. Knew his family had been murdered.
And he killed your father in a single blow.
Rhys had shown you that part of the memory, let you look at the wide-eyed Tamlin facing Rhys in the dark after that moment. Youâd felt the power shift from your father to Rhys as if you were Rhys himself, jolted by the sudden energy in your veins. Youâd seen how Tamlin seemed to have felt it from his own father, too. And through the memory, you had watched your brother flee.Â
That night, your brother became the High Lord.
Azriel was in the House of Wind the next morning. You didnât even see his wings or his faceâyou all but ran to him when he landed on the balcony, dazed. He was windswept and looked like he hadnât slept in days, but he was no longer your fatherâs spymaster. He was your brotherâs, at last.
 It was the same as being entirely free.
The urge to reach for him overcame you, but you knew better than to touch Azriel unwarranted. He barely endured Cassâs touchiness. You knew for certain he wouldnât allow yours. âYou did it,â you breathed, blinking through your stinging vision. âAnd youâreâŠâ Free from my father. Your own person again. Free. Free. Free.
Azrielâs gaze fell to your hand first. You thought he looked relieved. âAre you⊠doing all right?â
You blinked, still fighting a smile of relief. âWhat?â
âYour father.â Azriel scratched the back of his hair. âI⊠Iâm sorry for your loss.â
Right. Of course. The father who was no father to you at all. You shook your head. âIt isnât like that.â
His chin dipped. âAnd Rhys? How is he?â
You wrung your fingers, glancing towards the House. His relationship with your father was strained, neutral at best, but it still took a toll upon him far more than you. You only shook your head. âHe needs time.â
Az nodded. âYouâre sure youâre all right?â
âMore than all right, Az. Iâm glad youâreâŠâ You swept over his figure, as if to acknowledge it. âYou wonât have to work like this anymore. If you choose to work for Rhys, itâll basically be a partnership.â
He drew in a long breath, as if heâd been thinking the same thing. âYes. I believe so, too.â
âYou want to? Work as a spymaster, I mean.â
He nodded. âFor Rhys, I would.â
You mirrored him. Then looked at your tattoo. âAnd this?â you asked, wiggling your fingers. âWhy is it still here?â
âBecause the bargain isnât over,â he said. âYou still have to do the favor I was promised.â
You stared, trying to recall the bargain at allâyouâd forgotten the actual details, considering it was mostly his promise that had remained with you. âOh,â you finally said. âI suppose youâre right.â You shifted on your feet. âWhat is it, then? What do you want?â
He considered you. âAnother bargain,â he said.
For a moment, you only blinked. âWhat?â
âAnother bargain,â he repeated. âI want another one. A simpler one that can be fulfilled easily.â He flicked his chin in gesture to the mark. âThen you can test out the extents and uses of a bondâs communication.â
You had mentioned the theory to him before. But there hadnât been time to experiment with it, test its limits or take anything to Day and Dawn. You tilted your head. âThatâs all?â
âThatâs all,â Az affirmed.
âWhy?â
âWhy not?â he asked. âRhys said that theory might be able to do us some good. Or would you prefer something more difficult?â
âNo,â you said briskly. âNo, thatâs⊠fine. Whatâs the other end of the bargain, then?â
âUp to you,â he said. âJust pick something easy to fulfill.â
Your lips twisted in thought. âAll right.â You reached behind the nape of your neck, unclasping the chain tucked beneath your neckline. âPut this on,â you said, offering it forward.
He stared at it, but took it, putting it around his neck. There was no pendant, no design. Only the silver your mother had given you.
âThis belongs to you now,â you told him. âIf you ever remove that necklace, it will belong to me.â
He shook his head. âYou need to be the one who can break it.â
âThen go the other way around.â
He nodded, unclasping the necklace. You put it back on. âIf you remove that necklace, it will belong to me. Deal?â
A simple fulfillment. âItâs a bargain.â You offered your still-marked hand. He took it and shook.
The mark disappeared all but for a momentâthen returned.
It was the same, now-familiar pattern, but in lighter ink now, beautifully deep navy and violet that shifted like starlight and auroras over your skin. You could still feel it, that warmth laced deep into your flesh, your bones, your being.
âTest it whenever and however you want,â Azriel said.
You nodded. âWhy do you want me to, anyways?â
âWho else in Prythian can?â he asked. âYouâre the most versatile of High Fae.â
âIâm not High Fae,â you corrected.
âDoesnât matter what you are. Youâre likely the smartest of any living fae.â He didnât seem fazed by the quiver in your expression. âLet me know how your research progresses. I think Iâll be in the House of Wind more often now.â
You couldnât help your grin nowâperhaps the first one you had worn in years. âWill do, Shadowsinger.â
His eyes brightened, only a sliver. âGlad to hear it, princess of Velaris.â
Another year passed, and while you were still averse to wings, your grief could only ground you for so long. With Illyrian blood, like magic itself, there was always the inner urge to use what was given to you; to fly, or to let power surge through you. And perhaps the fae parts of you that had thrived in other courts had sustained you well before all this guilt, before all this burgeoning rage. But now, they could no longer.
You were four and a half decades of age when you first stepped foot into the Illyrian camps.
It was a miracle Rhys permitted you. Youâd never forget how the blank look on his face had twisted into something like panicâor disgustâwhen you first told him.
But by then, exactly a decade after your motherâs death, a fourth of your life had already been spent without her. It was only a matter of time before you or Rhys reached your centennial, yet you were still considered young, so young. You were afraid you might lose all of who you once were in your first three decades by the time the absence of your mother took up the majority of your life.
You wanted to grow stronger. To fix the parts of you that had failed. And you knew no other place to do it, with your Illyrian blood thrumming through you, begging you to be released after so long.
You had begun to visit Dawn and Day more often. It had been a worthy distraction, to research and learn and spend time in a place so far removed from the horror that haunted you every night. But you decided to dedicate yourself wholly to training. There could be no more distractions.
It was time, you thought. Time to at least be surrounded by those wings even if you thought you would never be able to wear them yourself again.
But Rhys wasnât a fool. He knew, in part, you were also punishing yourself.
He also knew that if you didnât do this under his supervision, you would find other ways to channel your guilt. And you were an Illyrian as much as he was, after all. You knew he would struggle to deny you an opportunity that had been so easily given to him.
Being a female, it was a privilege of your blood to stand in the training camps as a warrior and not be killed the moment you stepped out. That made it no easier. Your brother spent those first days visiting the camp, growling at anyone who so much as glared at you. But you didnât want to be coddled, and he wasnât your parentâeven if he was all you had left. Thatâs where Cass and Az came in. The greatest warrior in the camp and the shadowsinger seemed about as welcoming as the rest at first, vicious and capableâmore capable than any others in the campâbut they were somewhat familiar. And when they looked at you, there was no guilt in their eyes. No desperate need to atone for something you still couldnât tell if he could have prevented.
You had grown far closer with Rhys in the time youâd come to stay in Velaris, and it was easier not to have him stand your ground at the camps. Your name did enough to prevent anything unforgivable, but that made no less of the treatment easier to endure. Cassian was a general, and his word went, but heâd grown into something as ferocious as Rhys without provocation, as protective over you as someone of your own blood, as if he saw you just as Rhys did. And he was too familiar with the males of the camps: it seemed the Illyrians wanted to provoke Rhys and Cass. Always little by little. Because violence, confrontation, battle, they knew. But Azriel⊠they didnât know his ways, and they were afraid of him, the shadowsinger. The times he came to the camp, he didnât need to make himself known to ward off offenders. They cleared at the shadows in his eyes, around his shoulders. And when he looked at you⊠they cleared ever slightly, gaining back that ease youâd seen in him when you were children.
Heâd stay in your motherâs house with you when he visited. It was where you kept rather than those horrible male barracks. And he was warmer thereâquiet, listening more than speaking, unlike Cassian, but warm. Never unkind. Thoughtful, even, with how accommodating he was. It wasnât uncommon to wake second to him in the mornings and find food already on the table, or your leathers cleaned before you had a chance to. It seemed you were his guest in that house more than himâand you supposed you were, with how much longer heâd spent there. Sure, Cass and Rhys were often doing much of the same, but you supposed the real reason you preferred Azrielâs company was that nothing came in return: no questions, no delicate treading.
Az didnât ask you why you didnât summon your wings. He didnât ask about what the nightmares were, or what had you screaming in the middle of those unlucky nights they overtook you in the house during a visit. The three of them always came at any sound, of course, if only to make sure you werenât truly in danger. But Az never made you feel like you were being⊠plaguedby your past. Rhys always pulled you from your dreams by seeing them first, and you never had the heart to tell him not to look in your mind. At least in these recollections, he could be there. You wouldnât be alone. Heâd hold you, speak softly, look at you like he, too, was in pain, and it tormented you.
Cass was a little better, but he looked at you with a gaze that said, Iâm sorry. Not out of guilt but genuine sadness. He cared for you, hated that this was what you endured when all you merely wanted was peace.
Azriel did none of those things. The first time he was there to hear your thrashing, it was his touch that pulled you from the nightmares, bare, scarred hands running down your shoulders, warm and firm. Then the sound of his voice, deep and smooth coursing as the shadows themselves, yet so gentle, so careful. There was no surprise like Cass, no desperation like Rhysâperhaps a little hint of alarm, of urgency, which you couldnât blame him for but was certainly more than youâd ever heard from the shadowsingerâand he was unbreakably practical. It was a dream. It wasnât real. Always that first. Always that it was over, that you were safe. Then would come your name, tenderly, calm, to soothe you rather than fight your temper.
Az always let you cry, never waveringânever silently joining you as Rhys sometimes did as he held you. And you could never blame your brother for that; you had the privilege of breaking apart in Velaris before putting yourself somewhat back together. He hadnât. Heâd become High Lord, for Cauldronâs sake. Despite how much you loved him, how much he knew your pain, and how much as he could have somehow prevented what happened, you were certain he could ever ease your pain with his own.
Azriel didnât know your pain, and yet he understood it. He saved you from its echoes better than any other person could. And when you woke the next mornings, there were no questions. Even if you fell back asleep in his arms, youâd wake alone, sunlight pouring through the windows, the smell of toast wafting from the kitchen, and a shadow trailing from the blinds and slipping under the door, as if to both report to its master and tell you to come down. And if you wanted breakfast silent, Az would stay silent. His shadows would flitter around him and his own wings, but he never pressed beyond your well being.
You already knew the horrors of his upbringing through Rhysâthe same way you were sure Az knew about your pastâand you knew his brothers found him difficult to pry information from. Perhaps it was his own history that made him understand when to press and when not to.
He understood that if you wanted to say it, you would.
All of them knew what you had gone through already. That had never stopped Cass or Rhys from pressing about something or the other. You wouldnât be surprised if Rhys had passed over the memory of finding you to them. Never your own memory, of courseâwhen you finally came around to show him, to shoulder that burden, Rhys had offered to dim that. Heâd offered to strip it away, and your reactionâyour horrorâat the very mention had been enough for him never to offer something like that again.
So, while Azrielâs quiet terrified the rest of Prythian, like your brother, you saw the warmer parts of his quiet. Of his deliberation. Even that fated day three years after you began training in Illyria, when you were at the strongest you had ever been and a half dozen Illyrian males still managed to string you out into the forest in the middle of the night, addle you with bloodbane, and try to clip your wings from when they materialized during your nightmares, Azriel was quiet when he winnowed into the clearing. He was quiet when he threw the first one so violently into a tree that it splintered and cleaved. So quiet, even as your brother winnowed in a breath later, wordlessly sweeping you into his arms with undiluted rage in his eyes. So quiet, even in that heartbeat before Rhys winnowed away, when the shadowsinger began to slaughter those Illyrians who touched you, one by one.
You took on emissary work. There was little for you to learn in Illyria anymore unless you wanted to participate in the Blood Rite, which you both did not wish to do and did not wish to burden Rhys with. if a training camp was horrid to you, every qualifying Illyrian in lawless territory was worse than a death sentence for a female. Better yet, your experience across territories growing up gave you an edge as an emissaryâmost courts, even those not particularly fond of the Night Court, still had at least one or two figures of power who tolerated or actually liked you; even Autumn court had Eris. You had ties everywhere.
Spring Court was the exception, but by choice. The few times you saw Lucien across courts, it was clear you both had no hope or desire to do diplomatic work between Night and Spring. It was Lucien Vanserra you spoke to when you saw him, not the Spring emissary, and it was you he respected, not the Night Court.Â
At least he knew better than to ever mention Tamlin, even if only to notify you that you would not be hunted as Rhys or anyone from his Inner Circle would. Even he seemed to know it was as assuring as if Eris invited him back to Autumn.
It helped you pick up pieces of yourself, being an emissary. Visiting many courts didnât even feel like work. From staying in Day and Dawn, relations, as Rhys called it, often felt more like passing along notes to friends. Helion and Thesan had been more familiar faces than the Night Court for months at a time before your motherâs death, and they had always been kind to you. It had been Helionâs power, after all, that had saved your life that day. You hadnât been awake for it, but when Rhys found you, heâd sent for Helion immediately, who picked up where Madja left off. In your first visits back to his court when you finally managed to be a semblance of yourself again, you were sure to tell Helion he had saved your life in more ways than one.Â
After news had emerged of Tamlinâs fatherâs atrocitiesâand years later, the atrocities your own father committed in retaliation in front of your own brotherâwhile many courts cautiously, subtly withdrew from the Night Court, it was Dawn who sent immediately for word of your recovery and if anything could be providedâranging from prosthetic body machinery to even refuge.Â
The High Lord of Dawn was luminous, but you had never seen Thesan doused in such shadow as when you had visited him those first times after the attack. You could have only imagined the state of you then. Now, for your emissary visits, he was brighter, at ease.Â
You came to enjoy returning to Velaris, to the nights where the entire Inner Circle was home and youâd find them already convened around the table for dinner. Even on the nights they didnât anticipate your return, the seat between Rhys and Mor was always left open, the latter clapping furiously in delight at your arrival.
It was the closest thing you had to the years in your motherâs house again. Your brother would rise to press a kiss to the crown on your head, wings already settling comfortably back in his seat as Cass passed you a filled plate. Sometimes your gaze lingered on Rhysâs wingsâsometimes he wore them, other times not, and you were sure it would be more comfortable to abandon them here even though the chairs accommodated them. But Rhys loved themâhis wings. Somehow, despite everything, he loved them.
And here you were, still making your brother keep the House wards modified to let you winnow in.
Everyone was home when you returned from your latest work in Dawn, helping allocate resources and imports for the Night Court. Rhys wore his wings today, and youâd been mellowed by the ease of Dawn, so untroubled, for once, that the sight made you falter before you reached to greet him. With Azrielâs shadows swirling around his tucked wings, and Cassianâs wings confidently half-lifting with each grin, your brother looked so perfectly suited among them. They had made homes in their wings. Even Azriel, who hated Illyria.Â
âSister dearest,â Rhys purred, enveloping you in a hug. You frowned into his chest as he dipped his chin to your ear. âMor and Cassian are at it again,â he whispered. âDonât mention anything relating to romance. Or females.â
It only earned him a snort before you slid next to your cousin, who was glaring daggers at Cass. You didnât hide your amusement, but didnât say anything, either.
âWhat happened to you in Dawn, girl?â asked Amren, who had torn her eyes from the two and landed upon you. âWhere did you go?â
You blinked. âWhat do you mean?â
âI sense something. Darkness. Something old.â
It was enough to draw Morâs attention to you, momentarily forgetting her qualms. âDid something happen?â
âNo,â you said. âWhat are you talking about, Amren?â
Her eyes narrowed, silver-gray flashing like unsheathed blades. âItâs in your scent.â
âI donât smell anything,â said Rhys.
âOf course you donât,â she snarled. âThis sort of scent is millennia older than you. You wouldnât know it if it were right in front of youâit is right in front of you.â
âAnd what, precisely, is it?â he asked calmly.
âThat place,â she seethed, baring her teeth. You flinched.
âThe Prison?â Rhys asked incredulously. His eyes shot to you now, alarmed. âDid you go there?â
You shook your head. âMaybe someone at Dawn did. I know Thesan had visitors, but I didnât see them.â
âThe only way for you to reek like that is to have been there.â Amrenâs eyes were glowing now. âSpeak the truth, girl. I donât like to be reminded of that place.â
âI am speaking the truth,â you snapped.
Amren only hissed, looking like she was about to launch from her chair.
âEasy,â said Azriel, and your gaze flicked across the table. Heâd nearly fizzled out in the shadows, making you forget of his presence. His eyes were on Amren, scoping how her demeanor had shifted into something ravenously predatory. His interjection was enough to make her waitâbut not soften.
âExplain,â Rhys said to Amren.
âItâs the scent of containment,â she ground out. âOf power being locked away, stifled, until it compresses into itself and becomes something endlessly darker.â
Your eyes were wide upon her, mostly in disbelief. âI spent a week negotiating imports. Then I went to the library. I donât know what you want me to say.â
âSheâs mistaking your scent for something else,â said Azriel. His attention flicked to your brother, and you knew there was a conversation, brief and fleeting, happening between them.Â
âItâs the wings,â Rhys said at last. âItâs your wings being contained.â
For a moment, you didnât know who he was talking to. There was no more your wings when it came to you. Enough time had passed for you not to attribute that to yourself any longer. But when the room kept silent, and everyoneâs eyes had finally found you, it settled with dark, grainy certainty.
You didnât know how to answer.
âNot like that,â said Azriel suddenly, glancing at Rhys. âAbsolutely not.â
âNot what?â you managed, too disconcerted to reveal your annoyance at Rhys's daemati conversation to shut you out. But the two of them were suddenly locked as if in a staring contest.
Az was scowling at Rhys. âItâs not up to you.â
Rhys scowled back. âShe needs to.â
âShe wouldnât wantââ
âShe is right here,â Mor snapped, drawing back their attention. You silently thanked her, even as you glared at your brother.
âUse your words, Rhys,â you said. âDonât piss me off.â
Rhys let out a ragged breath. âShould you, Az, or should I?â
Az didnât respond to him. He just looked at you. âSome Illyrian wings, when left unused for too long, will accumulate the reserves of their energy. Similar to how an Illyrian would feel if they didnât wear their necessary Siphons. It can⊠condense within the host and bring a slew of issues. Itâs similar to the scent Amren is sensing because of its contained power.â
Understanding began to settle. Your mouth felt dry. âPlenty of females with clipped wings donât have this issue.â
âClipped wings are different,â said Rhys. His violet eyes were tentative. âYours are in perfect condition. The Illyrian power in you hasnât changed. It will have the same side effects if contained within you like that.â
âYouâre saying she needs to summon her wings?â asked Cassian. Heâd been keeping quiet for once, which only made you more nervous. If he knew not to talk, then this had to be more serious than you wanted it to be.
âNo.â Rhysâs throat shifted. âMore than that.â
Blood drained from your face. You looked at Az, who said to Cassian, âShe needs to fly.â
author's note ohhh yeah next chapter is probably my favorite so far. thank you for sticking along and commenting/reblogging/sharing! you're truly angels. taglist is still open, just comment to be added xx
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taglist: @rue963 @breathingstarlight @rinalsworld @kuraemiii @angeldestress @itsraininghyunebuckets @fallinlovelove @yswanx
WHERE THE MOON SHINES BETWEEN US â one Azriel x Rhysand's sister!reader
synopsis As the sister to the greatest Night Court High Lord in history, the one thing you share with Azriel is that you live in Rhysandâs shadowsâeach in your own way. But even being hidden canât stop your life from shattering, over and over again. When a bargain ties you and the shadowsinger together, what will stop that from being fractured, too?
tags yearning, slow burn, angst, hurt-comfort, mutual pining, childhood friends to lovers, inner circle, found family, did i mention SLOW BURN, this fic is literally her entire immortal life,
warnings features the spring court attack, under the mountain with rhys centuries later, & everything before, after, and in between. in this chapter: violence, angst, grief, mentions of war, spring court attack described in detail
word count 7.5k
author's note she's here. rhysand's sister if she survives and grows to rely on a certain shadowsinger more than she ever could have expected. technically i consider this two chapters, but we're setting everything in motion right off the bat regardless â expect no shortage of angst & yearning w everyone's favorite shadowsinger to come <3
series masterlist | next chapter | read on ao3 | taglist open
THE BEGINNING
Two years after you were born, a pair of boys opened the door to a windowless cell and pulled out their younger brother. He squinted, stumbling out into the open field under the dusky sun, and winced as his brothers tugged on his too-smooth hands that had only seen eight years of life. They threw him on the grass, soil staining his teeth, and splayed out his arms.
They wanted to test the healing that came from his blood, and so they did the first thing they could think of. The second-eldest brother kept him in place as oil sloshed over his palms, fingers, wrists. The eldest brother was the one to light the match.Â
The boyâs screams were what saved him.
Seven years before that, your brother was born. For Fae, the five years between you was barely a breath, but to Rhys, he might as well have been double your age. Your mother didnât need to raise him to care for youâit was innate, the way he wanted to shield you, to protect you.
He taught you to fly. Gently. When it didnât work, your mother took it into her own hands, doing precisely what she had done to Rhys. It worked. And youâd fly with him, sometimes, whenever you returned to the Night Court after a rotation throughout Prythian. Youâd tell him of Dawn and Day and Summer, and heâd look at you, grinning like you were showing him the world.
With a past of deprivation and enclosure, your mother knew more of what she didnât want for you than what she did want. She wanted none of the barrenness that came from being raised an Illyrian woman, terrified to lose her wings. Doing anything to prevent her cycle, to deny her body its natural course, only to have it come anyway, sending her to the square to have her freedom stripped. Caged. Clipped.
She wanted none of that for you.
You grew up around Prythianâas free as she could make you. It was a boarding school sort of arrangement; cycled throughout the courts for your schooling. Dawn, Day, Winter, Summer. Night Court was but a resting point, a home. You did your basic schooling there, but it was among the other four courts you attended that you truly grew, meeting new people who taught you various crafts and trades.
Your mother justified the system to your father by claiming it would teach you how to gain the favor of the other courts, encouraging alliances. For all you knew, perhaps it would lead to marrying you off someday. The daughter of a High Lord, even half-Illyrian, was still a daughter, after all. But for the first decades of your life, you couldnât be bothered to care. Not when women in your courtâwomen like your own cousinâwere suffering from within their cages, trapped.
It was thanks to your mother that you were nothing like them. That you were happy, safe, free.
You were barely twelve when Morrigan was brutalized by her own family, too young to truly understand the capacity of your eighteen year-old cousinâs suffering at the time. But you grew to appreciate the gift your mother gave you. It became your guiding star, your saving grace.
Freedom. Freedom. Freedom.
Even with so much time away from the Night Court, you saw Rhys often; despite being as worthy a warrior as his bastard brothers, he was in and out of Illyria to visit the Night Court as the High Lordâs son. Youâd grown to know many sons of High Lords and found your brother to be a better, gentler, more cunning heir than the rest. More importantly, even as you saw him growing stronger, he was still just your brother; you saw none of that politics in him. He always seemed to make sure of that around you, as if heâd wanted to spare you. Considering he was the one your father focused on for such things, it wasnât too difficult. It was your mother that placed any weight in your endeavors, who knew you truly.
Your mother had been merciless to Rhys in the way most Illyrian mothers were, though not unkind and generousâfar from it. You knew it was your mother that made Rhys the way he was, who made your brother someone so fiercely loving despite your father and not someone cold and sharp because of him.
You might not have seen him often, but never once did you doubt him.
Rhysâs love always glimmered behind his eyes, even in that stony mask of cold he put on outside in court matters. You could see it whenever you met his gaze, that hidden warmth behind his cunning violet. But you most often saw that part of him that was a brother more than anything in your motherâs houseâwhen he was with the two he considered his own siblings.Â
It was different for you, to know those two other Illyrian boys. You never stayed in your motherâs Illyrian houseâshe did all she could to keep you from Illyria, after allâand when you first began to visit her house at eighteen during your Night Court months, sick of staying in the Hewn City and desperate not to become what had been destined for Mor, it felt like being among intruders. Because throughout your life, you had been moving constantly, from court to court and back again. You had never had one safe harbor or refuge besides people. Home was Rhys and your motherânot these two Illyrians. Yet they were here, familiar to your home and not to you, born before you were even conceived. And they fit like puzzle pieces, even if you did not recognize them.
You were no stranger to Illyrians and their twisted ways; it was part of why your mother was so insistent on having you study abroad so often, unchained to any sort of possibility of what she had endured. That made you wary of Cassian and Azriel. What your mother had sufferedâand almost sufferedâat the hands of their kind, her kind, was horrific. Nearly unspeakable. Illyrians were brash, ruthless, lethal, merciless, and these two were no exception. But you soon learned the brash and ruthless one had been shamed and abandoned, had lost his own mother. And the lethal and merciless one had endured horrors and torture that turned his soul inwards. Yet neither brought their wrath upon you. No, they seemed tentative, careful with you at first. And yetâurgent. Steadfastly attentive. As if anything with a drop of their honorary brotherâs blood was their own.
You would remember that day forever: returning from a month in Day Court, languid and sleepy after poring endlessly in Helionâs sprawling, glittering libraries, and opening the door to a swaggering, thunderous Cassian who moved rather comfortably in the house. You'd opened your mouth when your mother embraced you, wanting to mention that she hadnât mentioned there would be other people here, too. Youâd shaken hands with a quiet, cool Azriel introducing himself without an ounce of acknowledgement of the shadows cloaking him or the fact that he was a stranger in your home. A sleepy-eyed Rhys had slid into the house after dusk, shrugging off his leathers and kissing the top of your head before collapsing into one of the dinner table chairs. Then he smiled and chuckled and laughed, as if those two filled him with life.
For years, you couldnât help your spark of ire.Â
A part of youâa hateful part of youâconsidered that perhaps you werenât sufficient. But then Rhys would come home and youâd see how his eyes would crease in the corners when he faced his brothers. His voice would lilt between the brothersâ animalistic fighting and thrown words, and even silent Azrielâs eyes would sometimes grow soft, losing that fogged, haunted gaze that had always seemed to cloud him. And so even if they were more brothers than you were a sister, perhaps Cass and Az were Rhysâs brothers. And if anything, you were glad there was a place for him to keep tending to the flames of his warmth.
There was a period later on, of course, when heâd become withdrawn at the hands of your father, who separated him from his brothers entirely. Youâd seen little of them, with the shadowsinger at the High Lord's whim and Cassian commanding legions. Rhys only had you until the trio reunited at the Blood Rite. That week, you were staying at the Night Court, and you couldnât sleep. Couldnât think. You had no doubt in Rhys, in his abilities, and you had heard enough about his brothers by then to know that they, too, were formidable. But there was always a chance. And those who expected Rhysâs survivalâall of the Night Courtâthought him unbreakable. But you had seen him broken and softened too many times to imagine him as the rest of Prythian did.
And when Rhys won the Blood Rite and returned⊠heâd come back with his brothers, but you were the first place he winnowed to, taking you into his arms and holding you with such ferocity you thought you might crumble. Heâd always cared for you, loved you as your brother, fiercely protective in the way many Fae males were, and you had always attributed it to those instincts and later; his guilt. But that day, when heâd held you so tightly, like it was this heâd been waiting for after reaching the top of Ramiel, you he was climbing towards rather than the summit, you realized how much he loved you for the sake of it. How much he needed you. And how much you needed him.Â
Nearly two decades drifted by. The war passed. Rhys gained and lost legionsâgained and lost himself. Heâd fought in battle, again separated from Cassian among the troops while Azriel was kept close to your father as spymaster. There were no more warm days in Illyria, no more voices filling the walls of your motherâs home. You hadnât realized that it was the presence of those three and your mother that had made Illyria bearable at allâmade it feel like a home at all.
You spent most of those seven years in Dawn, Day, and Velaris. Your mother, too, retreated from Illyria as it busied with warriors and preparations and kept to the City of Starlight.Â
Your brother, at least, kept in touch through your mind. There was no bond there, no steady assurance between you, but sometimes youâd be within one of Helionâs libraries when Rhysâs voice would find you, courts away.
He tried to hide it every timeâhow war hollowed him, stripped him bare.Â
And his walls were always upâthose mental shields, blocking out the horrors of what heâd seen. Whenever the Illyrian legions returned to their home bases, youâd abandon Velaris entirely, relieved to find Rhys with your mother in her home. You always knew he was aliveânearly every night, heâd manage to send some kind of message to you, which youâd pass to your motherâbut that never dulled the blow when you finally saw him.
One night, though, he hadnât sent word before his arrival. Youâd woken to the sound of the door opening, and you found him in the living room, sitting on the ground, wings drooping and his head in his hands, as if heâd been too tired to even sit on the couch.
I couldnât find them, heâd always tell you first. It was often the first thing heâd update you withâif heâd found his brothers among the dead. This time, however, he hadnât noticed you. Hadnât even lifted his head. Instinctively, you slipped into his mind, finding the answer without startling himâ
And was struck with the scene, so visceral and bloody you stopped short in your tracks.
That carnal, raw violence of the final stretches of battle, when weapons did little. When it was flesh upon flesh, brute force against brute force, and will against will. Bones cracking and guttural screams. No mercy. And the aftermath: bodies upon bodies, piling under the smoke. Flies and insects like maidens of death, flitting about the sea of the fallen.Â
And your brother, digging through them, hurling corpses aside at every sight of a wing.
Gentlyâso gentlyâyou retreated from his mind. So smoothly and soft, as if you were part of his own darkness, soft enough for him not to notice.
âRhys,â you whispered, and his chin lifted to you. His eyes were black, but his face was raw. âAre you hurt?â
He shook his head. Rasped, âDidnât find them.âÂ
Good news, a relief. But there was little warmth in your brotherâs voice. Only exhaustion. Bone-deep and so, so, lonely.
You said nothing. You only kneeled at his side and held him. Let him shed his tears in this darkness and solitude so that his legions would never know the heir to command was breaking apart. You knew that this place was a reprieve for him, that it was a pocket of the world that didnât know bloodlust and death. You and your mother helped Rhys heal from that absence of love during the War, but it was difficult when there was always a return to the battlefield.
That night you saw your mother from her doorway, woken from sleep. Even an Illyrian mother, never coddling, her eyes would narrow in that way they always did when she saw either of you in painâin true pain. In sorrow and desolation. As if she felt it, too.
Yet so softly, she would smile. As if her children, loving each other in a realm of so many brothers and sisters warring for power across the courtsâit made up for it.
Impossibly, those seven years passed. Youâd barely been able to study or focus knowing Rhys was off in the war, and to even imagine the rest of those you knew fighting made you sick.
Morrigan. Cassian. Azriel.
Your cousin, you were the most assured of. For she was making legends of herself with her successes, and there was always word of herâoff with the human queens, leading the charges and strategy, formidable and guided by truth. And Cassian, though never in the same rotations as Rhys, would pass through the Illyrian camp near your motherâs house with his own legion, and whenever you were there, the relief was disarming. Youâd find Rhysâs mindâor try to; he had always been better at the ways of daemati than youâand tell him his brother was still alive.
But Azriel⊠he was nowhere to be found. Nowhere at all.
Rhys told you it must have been because he was with your father, working closely as spymaster. You had little access to your father as it was and only Rhysâs word to count on. But you couldnât erase the shadowsingerâs nature from your memory, no matter how vague it was. He was the only one who might thrive in solitude. In desolation. Stillâat least Rhys and Cass were able to reconnect with your family in their own ways, no matter how rarely. Meanwhile, Azriel was the only Night Court spymaster there was. For all any of you knew, he could have been entirely alone with his shadows for those seven years. Just as he had been long, long ago.
As your family fought, you traveled between allied courts and mastered all else. Your studies were a welcome distraction as you grew, cultured yourself. You learned academics and the ways of healing and crafting and art. You practiced magic and glamours and fostered power. By three decades of life you knew things that Fae in their centuries hadnât yet learned.
By the end of the war, when the wall was built and humans were given freedom, you were not hailed as a hero, as the others were, but had still become formidable in your own way. A jewel of all courts.
You did not know politics, however. Not like Rhys. And you had met Tamlin before, albeit briefly, and Rhys had spoken highly of him. You didnât know that the rest of the Spring CourtâTamlinâs father and two brothersâhated your court for ridding them of their human slaves. Hated Rhys for the power he so clearly demonstrated. What you knew was what your studies and travels had shown you: the kindness of Fae. The warmth of different courts.
It hadnât occurred to you that there was a reason youâd never been sent to Spring Court. No more than their stance on humans in the past.
Five years after the war ended, your benefit of the doubt was enough for the sight of Tamlinâs father, the Spring Court High Lord, at the traveling Illyrian camp not to scare you. Not when you saw him over her motherâs shoulder.
Not until he drew a blade and plunged it through your motherâs chest.
You had learned healing in Dawn and Day, been taught things overseas that many your age would never have acquired. And though your power was not the same as those with such magic native to them, you think there had always been a part of you, unexplainable, that could tap into anything. Any little bit of magic if you tried hard enough. And it was Dawn and Day you had honed most finely, grown to feel at home in. It was the skills learned there that let you survive the onslaught and play dead, fashion a glamour until you seemed no more than a corpse for him to abandon. To try to heal your mother through the tears and deliriumâto mend the horrific, bloody strips of membrane left from being cut off. To somehow heal where the wings had been serrated from her, taken as if meant to be some prize or decoration. Her life force and freedom stolen to be framed like a prize of war.
You had failed in healing her, of course. Her head was already gone by then. But that didnât stop you from being covered in your motherâs blood by the time Rhys found you. You still donât remember what happened after that. Only the sight of Rhys when you woke in the House of Wind: his face in his hands, shuddering, too worn and shattered to even hear you wake. To even prevent you from hearing his voice when he thought you were asleep. It should have been me. It should have been me.
You did not fly after that. Not because you couldnâtâyour wings were intact, summoned at will like Rhysâbut rather because there was no part of you that could face your own Illyrian blood again. To use so freely what your mother had lost in agony with her life. Because it could have been you. Could have been you, keeping your wings in your motherâs place rather than tucked back behind you, disappearing into wisps of shadow. You could have been the prize, the target, rather than the spare that survived only because the Spring High Lord had underestimated you.
 You never told Rhys what you heard him say when you first woke in the House of Wind, but you so terribly wanted to tell him that he was wrong. That it should have been you.
âJust something. Anything.â
You hated it when Rhys sounded like this. Strained. As if it physically hurt him, grated the insides of his throat to speak to you.
âPlease,â he said for perhaps the sixth time that morning, his chin tipped down so low that he looked through his lashes at you, hugging yourself under the covers. His violet eyes glistened with miserably breathtaking beauty. Beauty you hated yourself for dimming. âYou love the Rainbow. Come on. Just an hour. Half an hour.â
âRhys.â You sounded hoarse. âLeave.â
He didnât answer for a moment, but you saw him stiffen. It was the first time youâd spoken in nine days. It had been like this for three months, having you lock yourself into your room in the House of Wind, with Rhys visiting every morning and night to try to coax you out of bed. Nobody else had tried to. Nobody else could.
Robbed of your mother, you had abandoned everything, body and mind. You didnât want to move or eat or speak. You did not use your wings. Did not summon them.Â
âI donât know,â Rhys said at last, impossibly soft. âI donât know how to help you.â
You swallowed a wince at the pang that shot through you. It hurt to see him this way, and you turned your back.
He called your name so desperately that you nearly whipped around.
âPlease,â he repeated, and the break in his voice this time was unfamiliar. Strange. âFather wants to send you to the Hewn City. But if you find a life here in Velaris, I think you can⊠I donât know,â he said, nearly frantic. âIâm sorry. Iâm sorry I wasnât there. Iâm sorry Iââ His voice cracked entirely, and there was a sharp intake of breath that made the first tear slip down your cheek. âPlease. You need to get up. You canât be like this forever. If Father sends you down there, I donât know if youâll come back.â
To the Hewn City. To the place you insisted on being sent away from barely a decade ago, just a few years before the start of the War.
âRhysand,â you breathed. âGo. Away.â
âLike hell I will,â he growled, but his voice died instantly. âIâm not leaving you here to rot any longer. I need you to let me help you. You need to live again. Even just a little.â
You squeezed your eyes shut. âWhy?â
âYou canâtâcanât be sent down there. You know whatâll happen.â
Whatever would have happened to Morrigan.
You all but pounced past the barriers of your brotherâs mental shields, tearing through walls of dark, foggy smoke. Get the fuck out of my room, you snarled into his mind.
Get up and make me.
Prodding my anger wonât get you what you want, Rhysand.
A pause. All I want is for you to be all right.
For a moment, you saw yourself from his eyesâa silhouette under the covers, cloaked in night. You felt his anguish and fear and rage. The deep, languid shadows of his mind were familiar, warm to you despite their inherent cold, and he was permitting you free reinâyou knew he wasâbut you also knew that you could pass through his defenses most of the time already. You retreated back into your own mind, sending out your next words, brisk and toneless: Get out.
Let me see it, he replied.Â
No.
I wonât do anything to hurt you.
No.
I just need to see what hapâ
No.
Father has been wanting toâ
GET OUT.
Out of your head. Your room. Your life. Your grief. You thinned your defenses to the scrape of his talons on your shields, letting your brother see precisely what it was you meant, what it was you wanted. To wither away, to fall from the cliffs youâd once flown from. After years of soaring in the sky, to crash headfirst into the ground.
Rhys slipped past your mental shields like smoke spilling into glass. Iâm mourning her too, he said. I didnât endure what you did, but I understand your pain, sister. I want to help alleviate it. Any way I can. Let me.
You said nothing.
He sighed. I can arrange for someone else to escort you out, if youâd like.
The very thought of anyone new, unfamiliar, untrustworthy made your stomach roil.
Cassian, then. Heâd be happy to join you.
I barely know Cassian.Â
You trust him.
No more than you.
Who would you trust more than me, then?
Your motherâs face flashed into your mind.
Iâm sorry.
Get out of my head.
You felt him retreat.
âPlease,â Rhys said out loud. Again. âJust let me watch the memory. It could help Father find him. Make him pay. If you want, I can removeââ
Donât finish that sentence. Your pillowcase was damp now, and you didnât have the energy to speak. Just go.
For a moment, there was only stillness. Iâve apologized to you endlessly, and Iâll continue to do it until the day I die, he said. But I need to help you. How about Day? Iâm sure Helion would be willing to host you for a time.
Helion has a court to run.
You are like a daughter to him.
I am nobodyâs daughter anymore.
Rhys let out a shuddering breath.
âGo,â you said hoarsely. âPlease.â
He sounded faint. âHow can I leave you like this?â
Just like you have every other night I ignore you.
Talons scraped against your shields.
If my company is the issue, he said, consider Cassian or Azriel, at least. Genuinely. Just let them take you to the Artistâs Quarter for twenty minutes. Walk around. Say nothing. Wear a glamour for a while. Just leave the house. Even the room. I donât have to be with you.
You felt it then, his pain. His guilt. Felt his regret at not meeting you and your mother halfway on your way to him as he was meant to, instead training his Illyrian legions. For mentioning to Tamlin where you were at all.
You turned back over to your brother. Faced his twisted expression. Your company is not the issue, Rhys.
Your brotherâs brows quivered. How could you have forgotten, you thought, that he was the same male who had blamed himself for every fall you made when learning to fly? Whoâd snarled at even Cassianâs sly remarks at your expense in the first year youâd lived with them for your Night Court visits? He had been gifted the power to experience the minds and lives of othersâyet it surely tormented him now, to feel any of it.Â
You were evil, you thought, for making someone so fiercely loyal suffer with you like this.Â
His eyes softened. âTell me what to do to make it better for you. Tell me how, and Iâll do it.â
And you knew he meant it.
For the first time, you settled in a place indefinitely. You moved to Velaris and dealt with the grief until it dulled enough to paint itself into the sky rather than every living thing the sun touched; just enough to function again. To start visiting Dawn or Day again and even sometimes Summer or Winter.Â
Never Spring. Never Autumn.Â
The latter was filled with power hungry hounds. Beronâs sons, youâd learned, werenât all terribleâEris was somewhat tolerable alone, youâd discovered in a solstice ball, when heâd proven himself not as vile as his brothersâand in turn had learned you were not as the Night Court had been made out to be.Â
Lucien Vanserra was the only Autumn Court son youâd come to somewhat befriend. Youâd seen how his own court was cruel to him, how he, too, had love stripped away from him before his eyes. But when he fled Autumn to serve as an emissary for the Spring Court, you never saw him or sought to. You wouldnât hold it against Lucien, knowing that in a life like his, any kindness at all, any safe harbor, was deeply, wholly necessary. Let him have it, even under the court that killed your mother. Even after you would hear years later that the order for your head instated by Tamlinâs father had been annulled by Tamlin himself upon coming to power. Let Lucien have that kindness; so long as you would never lay any eye upon it.
You kept to Velaris. You had already been fond of it, but you grew to find a true, steadfast love for it, walking along the Sidra and visiting the Artistâs Quarter. Nodding to passersby faeries who had never needed to face the monstrosity of the world beyond.
You still did not fly. Did not summon your wings.
Even as you began to smile again, enjoy yourself againâwhen fleeting moments of joy would find you, and for just a breath, you would forget the hole burrowed deep within youâseeing Illyrian wings made you want to collapse in on yourself. They struck you like the memory of blood against stone, like a fragment of the past thrust upon the present.
Rhys had never summoned his wings when begging for you to leave your chambers those first few months of your grief. He had no reason to. And outside of your nightmares, you never saw such wings at all, But half a year after your motherâs murder, when you did try, slowly, to live again, it turned out Azriel had begun to take partial residence in Velaris almost immediately following the incident while serving as your fatherâs spymaster.
âHeâs rarely here because of missions,â Rhys told you a month after you began to join him for dinner. âHeâll be here for this week before the next. I just thought you should be made aware if you hear someone arrive in the middle of the night, or if you see any shadows slipping around. Chances are you wonât hear him at all.â
That much, you knew. In your motherâs house, Azriel was only heard when he wanted to beâwhen he knew you needed to know someone was in the house or approaching. Mostly when Rhys or Cassian were doing Cauldron knew what in their chambers and Azrielâs presence was enough to humiliate them into silence.
âWhen was the last time you saw him?â Rhys asked over his shoulder. He looked rested todayâthough worn. Heâd been warmer lately, almost relieved. Perhaps he thought you were truly getting better.
âStarfall,â you said absently, following Rhys to the hall. Youâd seen Azriel in the years following the war before your motherâs death. Youâd taken those five years for grantedâyour brother, his brothers, and your cousin who felt more like your sister finally united with you again. There had still been affairs following the war that drew them to their duties, but youâd been able to sleep easily for once and learn to work without an undercurrent of dread. Gods, youâd replay the memory of Azriel coming back to the House of Wind forever after the War: how heâd embraced Rhysand and Cassian like they were air. The shadowsinger had never been so overwrought with emotionâand your brother never so relieved.
And you, watching them reunite⊠youâd decided right then that you would never forgive your father.
âThatâs almost a year,â replied Rhysand.
You hummed distractedly, gaze trailing the archway. A month ago, youâd finally agreed to leave your bedroom to join Rhys for dinnerâand only because youâd heard him arguing with your father. The High Lord had visited you those first few months, but you were too hollowed out and empty to care. After that, whenever he came, you often only heard the tenor of his voice burgeoning until Rhysandâs joined himâuntil they were roaring at one another, then the sound barrier would come up, and you would lose any hold on what they said. It became clear to you, though, what was happening.
Rhys was suffering for what you had become, in more ways than one.
You had decided that would be no longer. Even if a part of you would always thrum with dread when you opened a door to an unfamiliar knock, even if you would never fly again, at least Rhysand could heal. He could thrive if he didnât have you weighing on his conscience. You could endure being hollow and broken, but you were tired of being a burden.
As you followed Rhys into the dining room, you saw Azrielâhis back to you as he moved something along the kitchen counter. Behind him, as they often were, his wings were tucked in tight.
The memory struck you like thunder.
It was clear as day: wings, discarded and shriveled from detachment, as if they had tucked into themselves without their host. Red fluid from the membrane glimmering over wooden floors.
You stopped short, blood screaming through your veins.
A hand caught your shoulder, and you flinched, a yelp slipping from you. Rhysâs eyes were round, and the certainty of the panic in his expressionâas if he wasnât surprised but ready for this, waiting for you to crumble even if he didnât know whyâstruck you with startling humiliation.
This is what you had become. Something skittish and fragile. So easily shattered.Â
âWhat is it?â Rhys asked softly. Behind him, Azriel had turned, brows liftedâthen settled as he found you. Shadows danced around him like ocean currents.
He said nothing, eyes flicking to Rhysand first. You already knew there was a conversation happening between them.
âSpeak out loud,â you snapped. âDonât tread around me like a child.â
Azrielâs gaze finally landed upon you. Darkness incarnate. Yet warm. âIâve been wanting to check on you for weeks, but Rhys said you wanted to be alone.â His eyes were unreadable, but his throat shifted. âHow are you doing?â
âFine.â
His chin dipped, as if it were a perfectly sufficient response. Youâd forgotten what it was like to speak to Azriel, the only one of those three brothers who seemed to accept your silence.
What is it? Rhys repeated. Your mental shields werenât upâthey rarely were lately, with how little you left the House. And how little energy you had.
You swallowed, passing by your brother to get a glass from the cabinet. Nothing.
Something exasperated and tiresome pulsed towards your mind. Please donât do this.
Iâm too tired to push you out, Rhys.
Good. I donât want you to. You practically threw terror at my shields a moment ago.
Azriel reached over you when you opened the cabinet, giving you a glass from the upper shelf. âThank you,â you murmured.
Still waiting, by the way.
Your fingers clenched around the glass as you went to the faucet. Go back to Azrielâs head.
Iâm afraid he already beat you to cursing me and throwing up his walls.
You slammed your shields upâmuch to your detriment, squinting your eyes for a moment as you filled the glass. Azrielâs gaze warmed you from your side, but you pretended not to notice for the sake of your dignity. There was already one Illyrian male coddling you. One too many.
Clouds of darkness surrounded your mental shields, slipping into the thinnest of crevices of your mind. Donât tell me you forgot we can bypass each other, sister dearest, Rhys purred.
You jerked the faucet down and whipped around to him, glaring. Stop. Out.
Wonât do that.
Rhysand.
Tell me.
Why the fuck do you want to know so badly?
Because I havenât felt that level of fear from you in months, he said. Did something trigger it?
You loosed a breath. Iâm fine.
For Cauldronâs sake, stop trying to put on a show. His eyes burned. Just tell me whatâs fucking wrong.
âMy mother is dead is whatâs fucking wrong,â you hissed, then froze. Azriel was at your side, and you could have sworn his shadows winced. Rhys blinked, then his features seemed to twist.Â
Shame flushed over you in an instant. âFuck,â you muttered, practically dropping the glass into the sink and shouldering past Azriel.
You were already out the door by the time you heard Rhys call your name.
It wasnât your room you went to, but the balcony outside the dining room.Â
When youâd begun to leave the House again, whenever your brother was out carrying your fatherâs orders, you were often left entirely by yourself. Rhys had managed to modify the wards of the House to allow youâand only youâto winnow in and out so that you wouldnât be dependent upon his flying.
Because you certainly couldnât depend on yours.
Rhys knew why you wouldnât fly. He knew. But that hadnât stopped him from pressing, over and over again, for weeks, months. And now, as you heard footsteps approaching behind you, you braced yourself for more questions, more whyâs and tell meâs even though he knew damn well what had happened to you. It was as if enough questions would give the truth room to change. As if you could return to the way you were half a year ago, before the attack.
Biting your cheek as you stared out towards Velaris, you managed a weak, âI donât want to hear it.â
âHear what?â
You turned to Azriel. He glanced over his shoulder, as if your brother would be there.
âHe left, if youâre expecting him.â The shadowsinger reached your side, looking out onto the glowing streets far below. âI think he understands now.âÂ
âUnderstands what?â you asked.
âThat he crossed a line.â
âNo shit,â you muttered.
HIs gaze flicked to you. But he kept quiet.
âI shouldnât have told him that,â you said. âI was just⊠I donât know.â
Azriel shrugged. His shadows trickled onto the terrace rails, curling over your fingers. âHe was pushing you too far.â
âYou couldnât even hear him.â
âNo,â he admitted. âBut I could see you.â
You felt your neck flush. âLovely knowing my brother isnât the only one watching me closely for damage control.â
âIâm not watching closely. Itâs obvious. Youâre an open book.â
âIâm not an open book. Youâre just a spymaster. Itâs your job to observe.â
He shrugged again. But his shadows seemed to compressâdarken.
You frowned at him as his gaze drifted along the winding Sidra. âWhen did you start working directly under my father again?â After the war, his duties had loosened considerablyâenough for him not to work at your fatherâs every whim. Enough for your brother to see him again.
âOnly this year. After the ambush.âÂ
The ambush. Not the Spring Court attack. Not your motherâs murder. Nameless yet direct. You didnât know what to make of it.
âIs it⊠all right?â you asked. When his eyes met yours, questioning, you added, âI mean, I remember the warâhow long you were gone. And I know my father. I can imagine working under his command is⊠demanding. Besides, the last time I saw you was last year.â You scoped his features. Azriel did look tired, you realized. Not entirely, but enough, with darkness pooling in more places than beforeâunder his eyes, in the hollows under his cheekbones. The angles and planes of that undeniably beautiful Illyrian face had been sharpened. Honed. âYou seem⊠preoccupied.â
âItâs been fine,â he answered simply, not wasting a breath. Rhys had told you the truthâthat Azriel had been on constant missions, put under even more unrelenting pressure than even Rhys himself. At least your brother had the comfort of familial bonds to push back against your father when needed. Azriel had nobody and nothing to protect him. Nothing but his duty and honor as a shadowsinger.
âHowâs Cassian?â you asked. Youâd only seen him weekly since moving to Velaris. According to Rhys, heâd tried to visit almost every other day during those first few months when you isolated yourself, but Rhys hadnât allowed anyone to see you. Youâd barely been able to face your own brother and father, much less anyone else. When you began to enter the world again, it was Cassian and Mor who escorted you to the Rainbow on the days Rhys went off to his duties. Cass was kind, warm, easy. A welcome light in your pit of darkness.
And you hated it, how both him and your brother so easily looked after you.
âI havenât seen him in a month,â Azriel replied. âBut he seemed fine when I last did.â
You shifted on your feet. When you had resided in your motherâs home, Rhys and his brothers couldnât go more than a day without needing each otherâs company. Now things felt like the warâbut without their resistance as they tried so desperately to find each other. âRhys said he barely sees you these days, too.â
His wings seemed to tighten impossibly moreâdrawing your attention to them again and lodging in your chest.
Blood on wood. Blood on stone. Blood on wings. Blood on your hands.
Your breath caught, and you pressed a palm to the marble rails, drumming your fingers to stay in reality. To feel the cold. This is real, you told yourself. Velaris glittered, pulsed at your feet. This is where you are. The memories are just memories. What happened in them is over.Â
âWhat you said to Rhys wasnât wrong,â Azriel told you suddenly. You looked at him. He was already watching you. âI know you regret telling him that. But if anything, it made Rhys see a little more clearly.â
You exhaled. âI just⊠feel bad. Heâs suffering.â
Azriel swallowed. âI know.â
âI donât know what to do. How to make it easier for him. I feel like Iâm making him suffer more.â
Azriel looked at you. Blinked, as if⊠startled.
You bristled. âWhat?âÂ
He seemed to regain his focus. âNothing, just⊠he said the exact same thing about you just now. Word for word.â
Somehow, that made it worse. More tangible. You were the face of Rhysâs guilt, and you knew it.Â
âI know that you know,â he went on, âbut he cares for you. Deeply. The kind of love he has for you is rare, even among siblings. Just be patient with him.â
You winced and hated yourself for it. Your brother loved you, and you knew it, and yet the idea only felt like a burden. âI donât want him to. I donât want him to worry for me anymore.â
âIt canât be helped,â Azriel said. âBoth of you need time to heal. Heâs grieving for himself, but heâs also grieving for you. Youâve always meant the world to him. Youâre one of the only things he has that the court canât take away from him.â
Perhaps when you were being schooled all across Prythian so long ago, when you had recounted the other courts to Rhys and he looked at you with such wondrous love, as if you were the worldâit had been the world you were showing him. Perhaps to your brother, you had been a breath of freedom. And when you collapsed into yourselfâturned into a shellâhe had lost that. Been trapped in the world he was born into again.
Heat welled into your vision. âFuck,â you said, and you turned from Azriel, now humiliated as much as you were heartbroken. If you werenât so damn fragile, so weak-hearted, Rhys wouldnât know you were irreparable. He could have found peace if you could just force this fear down, this grief. He could have had you as a safe harbor while his brothers were gone, pulled apart by politics and time and war.
Azriel shifted behind you, coming closer. You felt his shadow pass over you. âThey will pay,â he said, deathly soft. âThey will pay for everything they did to you.â
You squeezed your eyes shut, tears slipping down your cheeks. Shook your head. âThey might not.â
âI swear it.â He sounded rougher now. Sharper. âI swear to the Mother.â
âDonât do that.â
âGive me your hand.â
You sniffed, turning back to him. âWhat?â
âGive me your hand.â He extended his palm to you. âIâll make a bargain with you. My primary task under your father has been to find the Spring Courtâs weaknesses to counterattack.â His shadows whirled around him, almost entirely shrouding his wings. âLet me prove it to you. Let me promise you.â
You blinked. âI donât⊠donât want to force you.â
âIâm already bound to this mission by the High Lord himself. Thereâs no more forcing to be done.â
You held Azrielâs gaze, that hazel in the gilded fae light. They carried more than you had ever seen from him in those passing months each year in your youth.
âI swear on my life, daughter of the Night Court,â he said. âThe High Lord of Spring and his sons will pay for what they did to you.â
Your brows furrowed. âThatâs a vow, not a bargain.â
He inclined his head. âThen if I succeed, youâll do a favor of my choosing. Deal?â
Azrielâs outstretched hand was lined and marred with scars, whorls of roughened skin. Memory, nightmares, permanently engrained into him. The darkest backbone of his life, wearing his promise.
You accepted. It felt like something had finally steadied within you as Azrielâs hand gripped yours, warm and firm. âItâs a deal, Shadowsinger.â
Almost imperceptibly, Azrielâs mouth tugged. And when you finally released his hand, your own was inked with the mark of the bargain, covered in night-dark lines.Â
author's note thank u for reading lovelies <3 let me know what you think! i've been in genuine flow state writing this fic because the concept of a half-illyrian daemati who isn't rhys and is a girlboss is just⊠well yes. i'm hoping to update weeklyish if not sooner. taglist is open, just comment to be added!
series masterlist | next chapter
WHERE THE MOON SHINES BETWEEN US â masterlist Azriel x Rhysand's sister!reader
synopsis As the sister to the greatest Night Court High Lord in history, the one thing you share with Azriel is that you live in Rhysandâs shadowsâeach in your own way. But even being hidden canât stop your life from shattering, over and over again. When a bargain ties you and the shadowsinger together, what will stop that from being fractured, too?
tags yearning, slow burn, angst, hurt-comfort, mutual pining, childhood friends to lovers, inner circle, found family, did i mention SLOW BURN, this fic is literally her entire immortal life,
warnings features the spring court attack, under the mountain with rhys centuries later, & everything before, after, and in between.
contents
Ëâș. one | THE BEGINNING
Ëâș. two | THE BEGINNING
Ëâș. three | BEYOND
Ëâș. four | BELOW
Ëâș. five | AZRIEL
Ëâș. six | BELOW
Ëâș. seven | BEFORE
Ëâș. eight | BELOW
taglist is open, just comment on any chapter or this post!
author's note hello loviessss i have so many writing projects i should be doing but i simply couldn't get this slowburn concept out of my head. expect (a) azriel x reader duh and (b) the centuries-long butterfly effect of rhysand's sister surviving the spring court attack. all events are as close to the canon timeline as possible, so fair warning: it will include the spring court attack and under the mountain in detail.
i have HUGE plans for this fic & i'm not sure how long it will be word count wise by the end. i already have quite a few chapters written and will be updating ~ weekly, so just comment if you'd like to be tagged in updates! <3